New Kepler Exoplanet List Unveils Sizzling Seven-Planet System

New Kepler Exoplanet List Unveils Sizzling Seven-Planet System

A system of seven sweltering planets has been revealed by continued study of data from NASA’s retired Kepler space telescope: Each one is bathed in more radiant ‍heat from their host star⁢ per area than any planet in our solar system. Also unlike any of our immediate neighbors, all seven planets in this system, named ‍Kepler-385, are larger ⁣than Earth but smaller‍ than‌ Neptune.

It is one of only a few planetary systems ‍known‌ to contain more than six verified⁢ planets or planet candidates. The Kepler-385 system is among⁢ the‌ highlights of⁤ a new Kepler ​catalog that contains almost 4,400 planet candidates, including more ​than ⁢700 ‍multi-planet systems.

“We’ve assembled the most accurate ⁤list of⁣ Kepler planet​ candidates ‌and their properties ‍to date,” said Jack ​Lissauer, a research⁢ scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley ​and lead author​ on ‌the paper presenting the new catalog. ‌”NASA’s Kepler mission has discovered the majority of known ⁣exoplanets, and this new catalog will enable astronomers to learn more about their characteristics.”

The research article, “Updated Catalog of Kepler Planet Candidates: Focus⁣ on Accuracy and Orbital Periods” is forthcoming in the Journal⁣ of‌ Planetary Science and is currently posted ⁣to‌ the arXiv⁢ preprint server.

At ⁣the center of ⁢the Kepler-385‍ system is a sun-like star about 10% larger and 5% hotter than the sun. The two inner planets, ​both slightly larger than Earth, are probably rocky and may‌ have thin atmospheres. The other five planets ‌are larger—each with a radius about twice the size of Earth’s—and expected to be enshrouded in thick atmospheres.

2023-11-05 03:41:03
Link from phys.org

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